Research that has exposed data around harm from international development and how accountability offices operate to address that harm.

Through our work in communities, we have directly impacted the lives of millions of people facing human rights and environmental abuses in nearly 40 communities. The type of support we offer depends on the community request, ranging from deep, multi-year accompaniment through a complaint process and the follow up, to a more limited review of key documents. These cases where communities have received our deeper support exemplify how communities have used accountability offices to demand justice and win.

Mexico: In villages in Oaxaca, we achieved an historic, negotiated cessation of a hydroelectric project that was destroying water and livelihoods for four Indigenous villages through a dispute resolution process. As a direct result of our work, the thousands of people that make up the communities of Santa Ursula, Paso Canoa, Cerro de Oro and Los Reyes have access to clean water through their creek, Arroyo Sal, and all of the cultural and environmental resources it provides.

Mongolia: In the South Gobi, we supported nomadic herders to achieve a landmark set of agreements to remedy harm caused by a massive mine, reached through a voluntary, multi-year negotiation process between nomadic herders, Rio Tinto, and local government officials. As a direct result of our support, the agreements have entered implementation phase — 200 children have received scholarships creating transformational educational opportunities for themselves and future generations, herders have received improved compensation, and the implementation of the agreements is still just beginning. A full documentation report of our impact is coming later in 2018.

In Papua New Guinea, Colombia, India, Nepal, and Liberia, our work has resulted in compliance investigations that have documented harm from investments, showing how due diligence policies meant to prevent that harm were violated. Through the accountability process, independent accountability offices have published transparent, public reports that have confirmed these non-compliance findings.

Our policy work has improved the policies and practices of every major multilateral development bank, three U.S. federal agencies, and has been instrumental in the establishment of two new complaint offices at United Nations agencies that finance development projects. As a result of this work, more communities around the world have access to independent, fair and transparent accountability offices where their voices can be heard. Each of our policy pages detail specific Accountability Counsel recommendations made to each institution and track their adoption.

Our research includes in-depth research to support our community cases, large-scale data analytics about our field, the development of a public database of all complaints every brought to every accountability office, and the creation of a comparison tool for the policies of each accountability office. Our research is, for the first time, exposing patterns that show advocates, policy-makers, and the institutions themselves best practice and where improvement is needed most.

Alongside this work, we have become a resource hub for organizations, corporations, and institutions working to improve accountability policy and practice.

Nine years after our founding, we remain the world’s only organization with a primary focus of supporting communities to effectively use accountability offices and ensuring that these offices are transparent, fair, and independent tools for justice.